Christmas gifts for grieving families in SyriaMonday, December 16, 2013

Displaced Christian families in Syria who have lost loved ones in acts of persecution and other violence are to receive a special offering this Christmas, thanks to the benefactors of Aid to the Church in Need (ACN).

The Catholic charity for persecuted and other suffering Christians has agreed to an aid package of nearly $53,800 which will be divided between 215 families who this Christmas are grieving close relatives killed in the conflict now raging for almost three years.

As the bitter cold winter in Syria deepens, the help is urgently needed for shelter, food and medicine for the families, many of which fled their homes after their towns and villages came under fire.

The families, many of whose homes and livelihoods came under attack, are receiving help from Melkite Greek Catholic Patriarch Gregorios III of Antioch.

The Damascus-based patriarch, who believes the families’ deceased relatives are worthy of the title ‘martyrs,’ stressed the need to provide help as many are homeless and dependent on family and friends to provide temporary shelter.

Speaking to ACN, the Patriarch said, “Many of those we are helping are very afraid. They are exhausted, having had to leave everything behind to find safety.”

“We are very thankful to ACN for these gifts of help for our people who are suffering so much at this time.”

The patriarch said some displaced families were living with relatives but others had nowhere to go and were dependent on rent money for temporary accommodation.

A number of the families are suffering trauma after attacks in which they were either caught in the crossfire or specifically targeted as Christians who refused to abandon their faith in the face of demands from armed extremists.

With reports that up to nine million Syrians are either internally displaced or living as refugees abroad, Aid to the Church in Need has this year prioritized help for people in desperate need of help.

Regina Lynch, ACN projects director, said, “This project is very dear to our hearts. The suffering of Christians and others has if anything got worse.”

This aid is only the latest in a series of grants that have been made by ACN to the crisis-stricken people in Syria over the past several weeks.

These include urgent assistance in support of the work of priests, Sisters and lay people ministering to people in crisis in Aleppo and Damascus.

Further aid, totaling $20,400, went in support of Iraqi Christians who have fled to Turkey.